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Post by Babu on Aug 13, 2020 1:48:42 GMT -5
Ozone hole in the arctic and northern Europe right now.
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Post by Crunch41 on Aug 14, 2020 23:58:34 GMT -5
Korea's Meterological agency has an english web site. This page has stats for several cities around the globe. The default one for me was Verkhoyansk for some reason, with stats that are completely wrong.
It's pink...not sure why
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Post by Beercules on Aug 15, 2020 0:05:53 GMT -5
^^^ Drugs.
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Post by Ariete on Aug 15, 2020 5:18:30 GMT -5
Korea's Meterological agency has an english web site. This page has stats for several cities around the globe. The default one for me was Verkhoyansk for some reason, with stats that are completely wrong.
It's pink...not sure why
European cities seem to be 61-90.
And for me it's white.
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Post by jgtheone on Aug 15, 2020 5:22:08 GMT -5
Korea's Meterological agency has an english web site. This page has stats for several cities around the globe. The default one for me was Verkhoyansk for some reason, with stats that are completely wrong.
It's pink...not sure why
Those are just Seoul's mean temps and rainfall, lol. But as Ariete said they seem to be old normals
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Post by Deleted on Aug 15, 2020 5:38:58 GMT -5
London's temperature data is very out of date on that site, though Warsaw seems to have become a hot summer climate.
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Post by kronan on Aug 16, 2020 10:04:21 GMT -5
I just realized that SMHI have digitized göteborgs daily max and min temps all the way back to 1882. Here's the very cold year of 1942.
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Post by Crunch41 on Aug 17, 2020 10:22:21 GMT -5
I just realized that SMHI have digitized göteborgs daily max and min temps all the way back to 1882. Here's the very cold year of 1942. That looks great for January - April, but too oceanic the rest of the year for me. June was very stable only reaching 20 November/December are too mild also.
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Post by Babu on Aug 18, 2020 4:12:47 GMT -5
Vinga, an island outside Gothenburg recorded the warmest low of the season so far with a 21.1'C low last night.
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Post by Babu on Aug 19, 2020 5:05:53 GMT -5
Longyearbyen recorded a July mean of 9.8'C this year. Which means they were extremely close to recording a "subarctic" year at 78°N
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Post by Strewthless on Aug 19, 2020 14:05:15 GMT -5
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Post by Donar on Aug 20, 2020 4:12:30 GMT -5
Converted to celsius. Me and the gang:
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Post by Strewthless on Aug 20, 2020 9:41:40 GMT -5
Converted to celsius. Me and the gang:
I've never felt so upstaged.
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Post by kronan on Aug 20, 2020 10:35:13 GMT -5
Some stats for Göteborg 1882-present. Note, some of the minimum temperatures in the climate box on Gothenburg's wiki-page were recorded at Säve-airport, between 1977-1983 and during a period in the late 90s, when there was no station operating in the central parts of the city. Säve is considerably colder, particularly during night-time, so that's why some of these numbers does not match up perfectly.
Coldest lows jan -26.0C feb -25.0C mar -20.0C apr -11.0C may -3.3C jun 1.8C jul 6.0C aug 4.3C sep -2.5C oct -8.5C nov -13.5C dec -20.0C
Warmest lows jan 7.5C feb 8.7C mar 7.6C apr 15.1C may 18.4C jun 21.0C jul 22.0C aug 21.0C sep 18.8C oct 14.9C nov 12.9C dec 10.0C
Coldest highs
jan -19.6C feb -15.5C mar -11.0C apr -2.5C may 3.0C jun 9.6C jul 11.5C aug 11.0C sep 7.5C oct 0.2C nov -7.4C dec -12.0C
Warmest highs jan 10.8C feb 12.6C mar 18.9C apr 28.5C may 31.1C jun 32.0C jul 34.1C aug 33.5C sep 28.5C oct 21.3C nov 14.5C dec 12.7C
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Post by Deleted on Aug 20, 2020 15:27:31 GMT -5
Warmest minima at Heathrow.
Jan: 12.6c Feb: 12.6c Mar: 12.9c Apr: 13.9c May: 17.5c Jun: 20.8c Jul: 22.6c Aug: 21.7c Sep: 20.6c Oct: 18.6c Nov: 15.1c Dec: 13.4c
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Post by Babu on Aug 20, 2020 18:06:45 GMT -5
May very well be a record warm year in many areas of Southern Sweden. Stockholm for example. The record is a 8.8'C mean
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Post by Babu on Aug 21, 2020 4:24:00 GMT -5
Do you think a station is poorly placed if it gets ground fog every clear night/morning due to radiational cooling and pooling of cold air? Or do you think a station is poorly placed if it almost never gets that sort of ground fog?
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Post by Deleted on Aug 21, 2020 4:49:54 GMT -5
Do you think a station is poorly placed if it gets ground fog every clear night/morning due to radiational cooling and pooling of cold air? Or do you think a station is poorly placed if it almost never gets that sort of ground fog? Only if you think that every frost hollow station is poorly placed. Almost all of them are in a depression that traps cold air (natural or artifical), or have sandy soils which lose heat rapidly after sunset.
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Post by Babu on Aug 21, 2020 13:39:07 GMT -5
Damn, quite the thunderstorm north of Gothenburg. These are the lightning strikes just between 19:15 - 19:30.
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Post by Crunch41 on Aug 21, 2020 13:54:30 GMT -5
Do you think a station is poorly placed if it gets ground fog every clear night/morning due to radiational cooling and pooling of cold air? Or do you think a station is poorly placed if it almost never gets that sort of ground fog? No I don't think so. Stations should represent the local area. If ground fog is common in the area, a station with fog at night is properly placed. In a city or other places that rarely get fog, using a foggy or frost hollow station as the official station is a bad choice. I would like to see UHI and non-UHI stations for a lot of cities. The UHI station is useful for those living in the UHI and the non-UHI is better for suburbs and outlying areas. If there are microclimates and UHI, then several stations is ideal.
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